SANTz members joined Nordic Week at UDSM as panelists, exhibitors and participants, contributing to discussions on how Swedish and Tanzanian partnerships can move from dialogue to action by linking research, skills, industry and policy to practical innovation
#SANTz#NordicWeek
everytime men complain about an “advantage” women have, it’s always because of the patriarchy
“women get awarded custody more”
yeah because y’all decided child rearing was a woman’s job
“male victims of women aren’t taken seriously”
yeah because you’ve decided women are weak and incapable
“women don’t get drafted”
see above
“women can make money just by being hot”
yeah because you treat us like objects, it’s YOUR money
My biggest problem with modern history lessons as an African is we're taught it from a Euro/American centric view
As an African you can't convince me Hitler was the most evil man to ever live. Sure he was evil to the Europeans
But to an African from the Congo, King Leopold who butchered them is the most evil man
To a black South African, Jan Van Riebeeck who took their land is the most evil man
To a Zimbabwean, Zambian or Malawian, Cecil John Rhodes is the most evil man
If our forefathers had the power to k!ll any of these men, the least of their concerns would be a mad man in Europe
Why is our African history minimized but European history magnified?
Well, when a child is conceived, the DNA split is 50/50 from both parents. Except for one small detail: mitochondrial DNA. It’s passed down only through the mother and never through sperm.
Which means something interesting: all living humans can trace their mitochondrial line back to one woman, not one man.
And every daughter born continues passing that same line forward.
Happy Women’s Day 💐
just heard someone basically say women don't have maternity leave in America because companies like Nestle lobby against those laws cause their profits for baby formula would tank as mothers would be home to breastfeed their kids.
do you understand how deep this is???
🚨 Call for Applications: Conservation Genomics & Bioinformatics Workshop 🌍🧬
A fully sponsored one-week hands-on training in the Western Serengeti for biology and biotechnology professionals & graduate students.
📅 March 15–21, 2026
👉 Apply here: https://t.co/vTNURBo3MI
EMBL International PhD Programme - summer recruitment 2026! 👀
Research groups across EMBL are recruiting now! https://t.co/EvhDhhrV5l
Don’t miss this opportunity to receive dedicated mentoring while doing interdisciplinary research.
Tarehe 12 Februari 2026, BST ilifanya Mkutano Mkuu wa Mwaka (AGA) na wadau mbalimbali wa sekta.
Mgeni rasmi alikuwa Prof. Peter Msofe, Naibu Katibu Mkuu wa Wizara ya Kilimo.
Wageni waalikwa walitembelea maonesho na kuzungumza na wabunifu wa bidhaa na huduma za kibayoteknolojia.
HIGHLIGHT FROM BST STAKEHOLDERS MEETING & AGA | 12 February 2026
Guest of Honour, Prof. Peter Msofe, Deputy Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Agriculture, visited the exhibition area and interacted with innovators and stakeholders presenting impactful bio-products and services.
OPEN ACCESS, free download : Digital Surveillance in Africa: Power, Agency, and Rights (Bloomsbury, 2025) edited by Tony Roberts and Admire Mare https://t.co/YqB3xEAvuG
AI is going to make people understand that the hardest part about building software isn’t coding.
It’s distribution, it’s business model, it’s management. It’s competitive advantage.
You can clone Netflix or Google or your favorite software in 10 minutes, what’s next?
Okay so, we just found that over 50 papers published at @Neurips 2025 have AI hallucinations
I don't think people realize how bad the slop is right now
It's not just that researchers from @GoogleDeepMind, @Meta, @MIT, @Cambridge_Uni are using AI - they allowed LLMs to generate hallucinations in their papers and didn't notice at all.
It's insane that these made it through peer review👇
Capitalism wants you to pick one interest and choose a niche. Your spirit wants you to express every aspect of your being because authenticity cannot be contained in one box.
In one hand: a clothespin from the 1960s. Solid hardwood, smooth from decades of use. It still works perfectly, some 60 years later.
In the other: a clothespin from 2025. Lighter, paler wood, brittle. The spring is thin and unstable. Marketed as “extra durable,” my dad just raised an eyebrow.
At first glance, it’s just two clothespins. But they tell a bigger story — the shift from durability to disposability, from craftsmanship to cost-cutting, from stewardship to constant consumption. This is planned obsolescence in action.
Products are designed to fail so we must keep buying. Slowly, subtly, they break. Frayed wires, cracked hinges, brittle springs. Not because we want more, but because the old was never built to last.
The costs are everywhere. Landfills overflow. Wallets empty. And maybe most quietly, our spirits grow accustomed to impermanence, to the idea that nothing is meant to endure.
What if this philosophy extends beyond objects? What if it shapes how we treat relationships, communities, homes, even the Earth — as temporary, replaceable, disposable?
It doesn’t have to be this way. That 1960s clothespin reminds us another path is possible. That we once made things to last, and we can again. That quality, care, and intention matter. That we can design for repair, for continuity, for meaning.
This is how health misinformation works: start with a true association, then smuggle in a false conclusion.
Yes — low vitamin D levels are associated with frequent illness, depression, fatigue, and poor metabolic health.
That part is uncontroversial.
What Gary Brecka leaves out is the inconvenient word association.
What the evidence actually says
Low vitamin D is largely a marker, not a magic lever:
•People who are older, chronically ill, obese, depressed, sedentary, or inflamed tend to have lower vitamin D.
•Raise the vitamin D level, and in randomized trials… most outcomes don’t improve.
•No consistent reduction in infections
•No meaningful antidepressant effect
•No metabolic rescue
•No vitality upgrade
If vitamin D were the causal driver Brecka implies, supplementation trials would show dramatic benefits. They don’t.
The sunlight sleight of hand
“15–30 minutes of sunlight” sounds primal and wise — but:
•It depends on latitude, season, skin tone, age, clothing, and sunscreen
•Winter sun above ~37° latitude produces near-zero vitamin D
•Sun exposure raises vitamin D modestly — it does not cure depression, fatigue, or metabolic disease
Bottom line
•Vitamin D deficiency should be corrected — absolutely
•Vitamin D is not a treatment for modern disease
•Low vitamin D is usually a symptom of poor health, not its cause
This is classic influencer alchemy:
Confuse correlation for causation, add sunlight, sell certainty.
Medicine is harder than that — which is why slogans outperform evidence on social media.